Stick to baseball, 4/4/26.

I’ve been traveling like mad lately; this is the first weekend I’ve been home both Friday and Saturday nights since the Super Bowl. That’s put a damper on any posting here, and of course makes me a little anxious about getting started again because doing so seems overwhelming. Some of the links below are as much as a month old.

Here are some of my most recent posts at the Athletic: I interviewed Bill White on his career and the announcement that he’s the latest Buck O’Neil Award recipient; I wrote up a draft scouting notebook on a bunch of mostly high school players I saw in mid- to late March, as well as USC lefty Mason Edwards; I did my annual predictions posts, including the full standings and the player awards; and I wrote up what I saw at the Arizona Breakout Games, including Brewers-A’s, White Sox-Dodgers (with 27 walks), Mariners-Brewers, Reds-Giants, and Guardians-Angels (plus some Rockies back fields notes). The record-setting heat in Arizona pushed some game times around, so I ended up seeing one fewer game than expected, missing Padres-Cubs from my original plan. I appeared on The Athletic Show to kick off the MLB season.

At AV Club, I reviewed the worker-placement game Skara Brae (no relation to The Bard’s Tale series); the polyomino tile placement game Wispwood; and the light set-collection game Sanibel, from the designer of Wingspan.

My newsletter is next up on my to-do list, followed by a new music playlist.

And now, the links…

Comments

  1. Good to see Awaken Realms back down and commit to not using AI, though I suspect it was actually PD-Verlag that forced the change (similarly to Ravensburger)

  2. Bill White’s book was pretty angry and cynical. has he mellowed?

    he shoulda been in the hof years ago.

    • He was a delight on the phone. But I also didn’t get that much into how badly he was treated as a player, or how little power he actually had as President of the NL. I’m trying to borrow his book from our libraries here – it’s really hard to find otherwise.

  3. Been saying this for a while… Polymarket and Kalshi are going to bring about the end of the world. Someone is going to make a bet on a nuclear strike and then whisper to Trump that it should happen.

  4. Keith, enjoyed meeting you briefly in Charleston today at the Blessed Trinity/Philip Simmons HS (that’s where my son plays) sorry you had to make the trip down from Philly for nothing – plenty of good talent on that team though :). Right after you left the top local TV sports reporter, Scott Eisberg showed up, and promptly departed too upon the news that Contreras wasn’t pitching!

    I am a fan of your work and very honored to have met you today, thank you for chatting with me and being so down to Earth, now I will be following you with extra respect now!

  5. I read Bill White’s book quite a while ago. Refreshingly candid and honest, and extremely revelatory about what it was like (and probably still is) to be a strong person of color in the executive suite. If we white men went through the crap he and his peers had to ensure, we’d cower in fear.

    • A (now former) friend of mine became very extreme in his views, essentially a neo-con, if I’m using the term correctly. And very racist. He had previously not shown any indication of racist beliefs.

      When the George Floyd murder occurred and the country was in turmoil, he told me some things that seemed contradictory.

      He said it’s easier to be a black person in this country because of [reasons]. I think he was saying some shit about affirmative action. I’m trying to recall this conversation.

      I think I said to him, “Wait, do you really not realize how difficult and scary it is to be a black person in this country right now? Surely you’re not telling me you think your life would be better/easier if you were black?”

      His reply: “Are you kidding me? Of course it would. With my intellect and test scores, if I were black, I would be chosen for any job/career/position.”

      He had no awareness of the fact that if he were black, he might have already been shot dead at a traffic stop because he didn’t follow the “obey or die” rule. No awareness of all the reasons he likely would not BE where he was in life if he were black. Decades of systemic redlining to suppress minority wealth and prevent minorities from acquiring generational wealth. And so on. The list would take an entire series of books to write.

      Even more baffling: His reason for objecting to affirmative action was: (HIS words):

      It’s not true that everyone is equal. It’s not true that the “nurture” part of “nature versus nature” is the cause of gaps in test scores or grades. It’s not socioeconomic factors or societal factors. Black people simply have 15% smaller skulls and thus 15% smaller brains.

      (Back to my words now. Not my words to him, my words to this forum.)

      Whoa. Wow.

      So, according to his “logic”, life would be easier for him if we were black with his intellect and test scores, but I suppose he believes would have been immune to what he claims is a genetic deficiency in the brains of black people.

      I didn’t have much to say to him at that moment or any time since then. I said to myself, “Okay, this is not the person I knew (or, it is, but he disguised it well), so I’ll just use this helpful “remove from friends” button.

      I mean, what can you even say to that?

  6. Uppity was a great read and Bill pulls no punches. Living in STL we have a few copies floating around the library system and maybe you can get one via the interlibrary loan system called Tipasa.